TKActions V5−updated and improved

First off, a big “THANK YOU!” to everyone who as emailed suggestions for improving the TKActions V5 panel. Lots of good ideas out there that I would not have thought of on my own. The panel has been updated to incorporate many of them into the CC version. A download of the updated version was emailed to V5 customers on April 22 and 23. Please check your junk/spam email folder for those dates if you didn’t receive it yet. I’m also excited that there are more updates planned for the V5 panel in the coming months, some even for the CS6 version. Customers who have purchased the V5 will receive them for free, so be sure to watch your email and this blog for additional information. If you would like to purchase the V5 panel, it is available on the Panels & Videos page. NOTE: The current update is only for the Photoshop CC version of the panel. Most of the enhanced features cannot be programmed into the CS6 version.

Sean Bagshaw has a great video that runs through the new features in the V5 panel:

Below is a quick review of the new features listing details and advantages. The original function of each button remains unchanged. What’s new are the enhanced functions accessed by pressing a modifier key when clicking a particular button on the panel. The “ALT” key on Windows (“option” key on Mac) is the most frequent modifier. This is designated as “ALT/option” in the text below. The “Shift” key is also occasionally used as is the “CTRL/control” key (Windows-“CTRL” / Mac-“command”).

All modules

“TK” appears in front of the module names in the Window > Extensions menu in Photoshop and on the module’s tab. This makes it easier to find the V5 modules in the “Extensions” list if the user has multiple extension panels installed.

The animated active selection indicator is slightly taller. This is subtle but provides slightly better visibility when the “Animated” indicator is chosen. The “Fixed” selection indicator (red dashes) has not changed.

Theme-matched rollover Help. This provides a much cleaner look to the modules that blends better with the overall theme chosen as the Photoshop interface. The Help messages still appears in the window at the bottom of each module, but this window is no longer a distracting white box.

Control module

+/- Layer Mask button: ALT/option adds a black (hide-all) mask on the active layer.
Advantage: A black mask makes it easier to paint in adjustments that affect only small parts of the image.

Group button: ALT/option adds a black (hide-all) mask to the Group layer when it’s created.
Advantage: A black mask can be useful when using the mask-the-mask technique described in Sean Bagshaw’s videos when only a small portion of an adjustment within the group needs to be revealed in the composite image.

View button: ALT/option opens a Curves adjustment instead of a Levels adjustment for modifying the mask of an active selection.
Advantage: Some people prefer Curves to Levels.

Intro module

This module has been redesigned to incorporate the “spectrum” interface first introduced in the V4 panel. With it, the relative amount of tones selected by each mask is suggested by the location and width of the buttons, which are placed against a tonal gradient background. Wide buttons select more tones, narrow buttons select fewer tones.
Advantage: For people new to luminosity masks, this arrangement can help visualize the tonal range of each mask. The Intro module continues to use the Luminosity Lock/Rapid Mask engine for generating luminosity masks, so the power, speed, and mask-based interface are all still available when using this module.

The black background of the LumLock section now tone-pulses from black to gray then back to black.
Advantage: Visually more distinct than the previous black background to better distinguish the LayerMask module from the RapidMask module that has a similar layout.

Enhanced visibility when “Auto-Apply” is checked. The words “Auto-Apply” change to green and the black background tone-pulses from black to gray.
Advantage: Better distinguishes when “Auto-Apply” is turned on.

Actions module

Clarity button: ALT/option runs the action on a Smart Object layer.
Advantage: Allows the blur radius to be changed later. This is done by double-clicking the “High Pass” filter on the Smart Object layer and entering a different Radius value.

Orton Effect button: ALT/option runs the action on a Smart Object layer.
Advantage: Blur can be readjusted later as needed by double-clicking Gaussian Blur on the Smart Object layer.

Personal action buttons: Several changes:
a) ALT/option-click opens a window that allows the user to change the button’s name.
Advantage: Easier to remember the action associated with each button.
b) CTRL/command-click opens a window that allows the user to change the button’s rollover Help message.
Advantage: A more descriptive message about the action programmed into this button can be entered.
c) Shift-click restores the default name and rollover Help for the button.

Larger font size for the “Dimension” and “Opacity” fields.
Advantage: Easier to see on high-resolution monitors.

Better stacking capability for smaller monitors via a workaround that fools Photoshop into believing the panel is shorter than it is.

Batch module

Larger font size for the “Dimension” and “Opacity fields.
Advantage: Easier to see on high-resolution monitors.

Multi-dimensional batch web-sharpening is now available. If images need to be output to different sizes, multiple dimensions can be entered in the “Dimension” field. It’s just necessary to separate each value with a semicolon and have no spaces. Example: 800;1024;2048. Using this example, three images will be output for every input image, each having one of the three listed dimensions: 800-pixels, 1024-pixels, and 2048-pixels. The action adds a suffix to each image listing the dimension to which it has been sized.

I hope you find these enhancements useful. More to come, so stay tuned.

5 thoughts on “TKActions V5−updated and improved”

The whole of my post processing depends greatly on your luminosity mask panel. It is amazingly good. You have changed the way I approach post processing.

Are the individual actions available? I would love to have a white brush and black brush on Hard Mix blend mode to use for modifying my mask in certain areas. I usually use 5 to 15% opacity but sometimes go higher. The white foreground allows me to make light colors lighter and the dark foreground makes dark colors in the mask darker. I have tried to do the action on my own but I’m not yet proficient enough to change the default of the foreground to make it available to me in the action.

I give your V5 panel my highest recommendation. It would be tough to live without it.

Have you considered or know of away to allow me to program shortcuts onto my Wacom Pro from TK Panels? At this point, over the years of using TK Panels and their advancement, most of my Wacom shortcuts through PS have become useless, but it would be great to be able to program TK Panel functions onto my Wacom and Pen!